Trump and
Putin Put on a Show of Friendship but Come Away Without a Deal
President
Trump gave President Vladimir Putin a warm public reception, effectively ending
his diplomatic isolation over the past three years for his invasion of Ukraine.
But Mr. Putin did not agree to stop the war.
Peter
Baker Katie
Rogers
By Peter
Baker and Katie Rogers
Peter
Baker, the chief White House correspondent, has covered U.S.-Russian summit
meetings since 1998. Katie Rogers, a White House correspondent, traveled with
President Trump on Air Force One to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in
Anchorage.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/15/us/politics/trump-putin-alaska-ukraine.html
Aug. 15,
2025
President
Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia reached no agreement to end the
war in Ukraine at a high-profile summit meeting on Friday, although they
reported making unspecified progress during a strikingly convivial reunion on
American soil.
While Mr.
Trump had hoped to seal a deal for an immediate cease-fire, he acknowledged
that the two leaders fell short, at least for now. “We haven’t quite got there,
but we’ve made some headway,” he told reporters after hours of meetings on a
U.S. military base in Alaska. “There’s no deal until there’s a deal.”
But if
the substance remained unsettled, the atmospherics were extraordinary. The
president rolled out a literal red carpet and even applauded as he welcomed Mr.
Putin, who is under U.S. sanctions and faces an international arrest warrant
for war crimes. The two laughed and spoke warmly with each other, and Mr. Trump
even invited Mr. Putin to ride with him in the armored presidential limousine
to their meeting.
At their
subsequent joint appearance at side-by-side lecterns at Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson, they heaped praise on one another. “We really made some
great progress today,” Mr. Trump said. “I’ve always had a fantastic
relationship with President Putin, with Vladimir.”
Mr. Putin
referred to Mr. Trump as a “dear neighbor” with whom he can do business.
“President Trump and I have established a very good, businesslike and
trustworthy contact,” he said in Russian.
The
Russian president even suggested that Mr. Trump visit him in the Russian
capital. “Next time in Moscow,” he said, breaking into English.
“Ooh,
that’s an interesting one,” Mr. Trump replied. “I don’t know. I’ll get a little
heat on that one, but I could see it possibly happening.”
The two
ended their encounter in Alaska, however, in a cloud of uncertainty. Mr. Trump
referred obliquely to “agreement” on some undisclosed points but not on others,
while Mr. Putin said even more elliptically that they reached an
“understanding.” Neither explained nor took questions from reporters. Mr. Trump
said he would follow up by calling fellow NATO leaders and President Volodymyr
Zelensky of Ukraine.
The
meeting was a major diplomatic gamble by Mr. Trump unlike anything his
predecessors might have tried and seen as a victory for Mr. Putin, who has not
been welcome in the West for years and now has been effectively liberated from
the diplomatic isolation he had been consigned to for the past three years.
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In fact,
it would be hard to imagine an event that could have gone better from the point
of view of the Russian leader, who made no public commitment to stop his
assault on Ukraine and yet was treated as a valued friend. Mr. Trump did not
fault Mr. Putin for starting the brutal war and left without mentioning the
sanctions that just hours earlier he had threatened to impose if there were no
deal.
The
images emerging from the Alaska encounter were remarkable in the history of
U.S.-Russian summits. Mr. Putin, who has not been to the United States outside
of U.N. meetings since 2007 and has been under U.S. sanctions since 2022, was
invited to a military base that is on the front line of the defense of American
territory against possible Russian aggression.
Flying
overhead as Mr. Putin arrived was a B-2 stealth bomber that is key to the U.S.
nuclear deterrent, flanked by the kind of fighter jets that are often deployed
to intercept Russian planes in the airspace near Alaska.
Standing
on the tarmac waiting, Mr. Trump clapped for Mr. Putin as the Russian strode
toward him, then gave him a warm handshake, patting his arm and hand. Mr. Putin
smiled broadly and talked jovially with Mr. Trump like old friends.When a
reporter asked Mr. Putin if he would stop killing civilians, he smirked and
pointed to his ear as if to suggest he could not hear the question.
Mr.
Trump’s invitation to Mr. Putin to join him in the armored presidential
limousine for the ride to their meeting location without aides was a highly
unusual gesture. Mr. Putin could be seen through the window laughing as the car
pulled away.
Democrats
contended that hosting Mr. Putin under such circumstances sent a dangerous
message. “The photo-op in and of itself essentially legitimizes war crimes,
telegraphs to other autocrats or evil men around the world that they can get
away with murdering civilians and still get a photo-op with the president of
the United States,” Senator Chris Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut, said earlier
on Friday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”
The
hurriedly arranged meeting was meant to break the logjam that has stymied Mr.
Trump’s peacemaking efforts since he returned to office six months ago with a
promise to end the Ukraine war within 24 hours. The rest of the world watched
to see whether Mr. Trump would find common ground with Mr. Putin and whether
Ukraine’s interests would be represented or sacrificed by the leaders of the
two major nuclear superpowers.
Mr. Trump
told reporters on Air Force One on the way to Alaska that he hoped to broker at
least a temporary end to hostilities. “I want to see a cease-fire rapidly,” he
said. “I don’t know if it’s going to be today. But I’m not going to be happy if
it’s not today.”
He
repeated his warning that he would impose “severe consequences” if Russia
balked at a halt to the fighting without specifying what they might be. And he
promised to involve Ukraine in any decision over territorial concessions that
might accompany a more enduring peace settlement.
Mr.
Zelensky, who was not invited to the conference called to determine his
country’s future, sought to influence it from afar by reminding the world that
Russia continues to attack civilian targets in hopes of stiffening Mr. Trump’s
spine against Russian spin.
“On the
day of negotiations, the Russians are killing as well,” Mr. Zelensky said in a
video posted online before the meeting began. “And that speaks volumes.” He
added: “Ukraine is ready to work as productively as possible to bring the war
to an end, and we count on a strong position from America. Everything will
depend on this — the Russians factor in American strength. Make no mistake —
strength.”
The
meeting was the seventh in-person encounter between Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin and
the first of the American’s second term. Mr. Trump said in the days leading up
to the Alaska get-together that it was meant to be a listening session to
determine whether peace was possible and that if he decided it was, he would
then invite Mr. Zelensky to sit down with Mr. Putin directly. No mention of
that was made following Friday’s session.
While it
was originally scheduled to be a one-on-one meeting with Mr. Putin, along with
interpreters, the session was expanded at the last minute to include Secretary
of State Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff, the president’s special envoy, who has
been negotiating with the Russians.
Mr. Putin
was joined by Sergey V. Lavrov, his often combative foreign minister, who sent
a pointed message when he arrived in Alaska the previous night wearing a
sweatshirt emblazoned with CCCP, the Cyrillic letters for USSR.
The two
leaders, however, spent less time together than originally scheduled, raising
questions about how far they got, and they scrapped plans to hold a news
conference in favor of the two making back-to-back statements on camera without
answering questions. Neither did much to illuminate what happened behind closed
doors, and American officials did not brief reporters, as is traditionally done
after such meetings.
In a rare
move for the host of a diplomatic meeting, Mr. Trump deferred to his Russian
visitor to speak first at their public appearance. Mr. Putin played to his
host’s sensibilities by offering validation of his longstanding insistence that
Moscow would not have staged its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 if Mr.
Trump had still been president.
“Today we
hear President Trump say, ‘If I were president, there would be no war,’” Mr.
Putin said. “I think that would actually happen. I confirm this.”
He
suggested that the two would now succeed at ending that war without saying how.
“I would like to hope that the understanding we have reached will allow us to
get closer to that goal,” Mr. Putin said of security for Ukraine, “and open the
way to peace in Ukraine.”
But he
still insisted that any enduring resolution had to address the “root causes” of
the war, a phrase that in the past he has used to insist on conditions
unacceptable to the West, including a rollback of NATO and neutralization of
Ukraine. And he asserted that Ukraine might throw a wrench in any peace effort
“through provocations or behind-the-scenes intrigues.”
When it
came to his turn, Mr. Trump was equally vague on what if anything they had
concurred. “We had an extremely productive meeting and many points were agreed
to, and there are just a very few that are left,” he said. “We didn’t get
there, but we have a very good chance of getting there.”
The
flattery by the former K.G.B. officer certainly registered. In an interview
with Sean Hannity of Fox News afterward, Mr. Trump volunteered that he was
“very happy” to hear Mr. Putin say the invasion would not have happened on his
watch. More broadly, he expressed satisfaction with the discussion, declaring
that on a scale of 1 to 10, “the meeting was a 10 in the sense that we got
along great.”
He also
shifted the burden for ending the war away from the Russian leader who started
it, asserting that Mr. Putin “wants to solve the problem” and that “now it is
really up to President Zelensky to get it done.”
Mr.
Trump, who has long expressed admiration for Mr. Putin, returned to the White
House in January expecting to translate their friendly relationship into
tangible progress. But after his repeated promise during last year’s campaign
to end the Ukraine war within 24 hours, Mr. Trump discovered what others had
long tried to convince him of: Mr. Putin was not eager to make peace, at least
not on terms acceptable to Ukraine.
Mr. Putin
brought with him a number of business executives in hopes of appealing to Mr.
Trump’s desire to rekindle economic ties that were all but shattered by the
2022 full-scale invasion. On the plane ride to Alaska, Mr. Trump said that the
Ukraine conflict would have to be resolved first. “They are not doing business
until we get the war settled,” he said.
Mr. Trump
said that he expected that territorial concessions would be part of a more
sustained peace agreement that would follow a temporary cease-fire but
acknowledged that Kyiv would have to agree. “I’ve got to let Ukraine make that
decision,” he said. “I think they’ll make a proper decision, but I’m not here
to negotiate for Ukraine.”
He also
said that “there’s a possibility” of security assurances for Ukraine from the
United States in conjunction with Europe as part of such an eventual peace
deal, but “not in the form of NATO” membership, which has been a key point of
dispute between Moscow and Kyiv.
Russia’s
leader was not the only autocrat Mr. Trump freed from diplomatic isolation on
Friday. As he made his way to Alaska, the president called President Aleksandr
G. Lukashenko of Belarus, one of the longest-ruling dictators in the world and
a figure long shunned by American and European leaders.
Writing
on social media, Mr. Trump said that he “had a wonderful talk with the highly
respected President of Belarus, Aleksandr Lukashenko,” to thank him for the
release of 16 prisoners, who were pardoned last month for crimes including
“extremism.” Mr. Trump added that they were discussing the release of another
1,300 prisoners.
The
government of Belarus later reported that Mr. Lukashenko invited Mr. Trump to
visit and that the invitation was accepted. The White House did not immediately
confirm that, but Mr. Trump wrote on social media that “I look forward to
meeting President Lukashenko in the future.”
While
President Barack Obama posed for a courtesy picture with Mr. Lukashenko during
a U.N. meeting in 2015, American leaders have kept their distance from him
during his 31-year reign. Mr. Trump, though, has shown more willingness to
engage. During his first term, he sent Mike Pompeo, then his secretary of
state, and John R. Bolton, then his national security adviser, to meet with Mr.
Lukashenko in Belarus.
Peter
Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The Times. He is covering his
sixth presidency and sometimes writes analytical pieces that place presidents
and their administrations in a larger context and historical framework.
Katie
Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.


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